Healthy Datas Articles Alternative & Holistic Health Traditional Chinese Medicine

The color of your palm tells you about your health, let your palm take care of your worries

By:Clara Views:352

  In traditional Chinese medicine examination, not only the facial appearance and color of the patient are looked at, but the palms are also the scope of observation of traditional Chinese medicine, and the various blood vessels and meridians connected to the palms are spread throughout the body. Therefore, if you want to know how a person's body is, you can know it from the palm of your hand. Changes in the palms can also reveal the health of the human body. Some liver diseases will be reflected on the palms. Here is how to predict diseases through the color of the palms.

The color of your palm tells you about your health, let your palm take care of your worries

  1. Light red palm: It is a normal palm color. If you squeeze it with your hands, the color will fade quickly and it will recover quickly, which indicates that the blood circulation is normal. If it cannot recover quickly, you should consider anemia.

  2. Cherry anthurium color: If the palm color is cherry red, and it is concentrated on the abdomen of the ten fingers and the edges of the thenar and large thenar eminences, you should pay attention to check blood sugar and urine sugar.

  3. Purple-red palms: If the palms are black and red, and appear purplish-red, it is necessary to consider serious heart disease, such as coronary heart disease, asthma, etc. When inflammation is not controlled and develops into sepsis, the palm color will also return to microcirculation and cause blood stasis, causing purplish-red palms. This is a danger signal that needs to be improved as soon as possible.

  4. Fresh anthurium: Fresh anthurium is brighter and more lively than light anthurium. It is common after blood transfusion or after recovering from a serious illness. Normal people will also make their palms turn red for a short time when they are too excited. If the palm color gradually develops from light red to bright red, then you need to observe the changes in blood pressure, especially the pulse pressure difference. It is very likely that the pulse pressure difference is gradually approaching. The healthy pulse pressure difference should be equal to 40. If it is higher or lower than this value, it is abnormal blood pressure. This change is related to arteriosclerosis (people who often practice Qigong will also have red palms). During menopause (regardless of men and women), the palms of the hands often appear bright red, and most of them are accompanied by menopausal symptoms.

  5. Liver palms: There is a kind of redness in the palms of the liver that patients with liver disease should pay more attention to. When the patient develops pink (fused or unfused) rouge-like spots on the thenar and hypothenar eminences of the palms, as well as on the palm surfaces and bases of the fingers. If they are pressed and fade, or may turn purple-brown over time, then it is considered to be liver palms. If you look closely, you can see many small arteries that are expanded and connected into pieces. Liver palm also reduces or disappears as liver function improves. The appearance of liver palms is related to the deterioration of liver function and the imbalance of estrogen inactivation. It can also cause telangiectasia, menstrual disorders, testicular atrophy or male development in patients with hepatitis. If things go on like this, it can also cause an increase in melanin in skin cells, causing hepatic darkening.

  However, patients with cirrhosis and chronic liver disease may develop liver palms, but those with liver palms do not necessarily have liver disease. Clinically, it is often seen that many healthy people also have liver palms, but after several years, more than ten years, or even decades of observation, the liver function has always been normal and liver disease has never occurred. Therefore, for those with liver palms, a correct conclusion should be made through comprehensive analysis and judgment based on medical history, physical examination, liver function, anti-HBV (hepatitis B virus surface antigen), B-ultrasound, scan and other examinations.

Disclaimer:

1. This article is sourced from the Internet. All content represents the author's personal views only and does not reflect the stance of this website. The author shall be solely responsible for the content.

2. Part of the content on this website is compiled from the Internet. This website shall not be liable for any civil disputes, administrative penalties, or other losses arising from improper reprinting or citation.

3. If there is any infringing content or inappropriate material, please contact us to remove it immediately. Contact us at: